General Principles of Circulation
General Principles of Circulation
Hagen-Poisseuille LawTM
Poiseuille's Law
The biggest surprise in the application of Poiseuille's law to fluid flow is the dramatic effect of changing the radius.
A decrease in radius has an equally dramatic effect, as shown in blood flow examples.
Blood Flow Examples
Suppose you have an emergency requirement for a five-fold increase in blood volume flowrate
(like being chased by a big dog)? How does your body supply it?
According to Poiseuille's law, a five-fold increase in blood pressure would be required if
the increase were supplied by blood pressure alone!
But the body has a much more potent method for increasing volume flowrate in the
vasodilation of the small vessels called arterioles.
Since the smaller vessels provide most of the resistance to flow, the arterioles in their
position just prior to the capillaries can provide a major controlling influence on the
volume flowrate. This system of small vessels can constrict flow to one part of the body
while enhancing the flow to another to meet changing demands for oxygen and nutrient
Blood Flow Examples
LAMINAR
FLOW
TURBULENT
FLOW
BLOOD FLOW PATTERNS
Dimensionless Numbers
REYNOLD’S NUMBER
Invented by an Engineer:
Predicts Laminar flow versus Turbulent flow
14-39
INTRINSIC REGULATION OF BLOOD FLOW
(AUTOREGULATION) CONTINUED
14-40
Wall Tension
Pascal's principle requires that the pressure is everywhere the same inside the balloon at equilibrium. But examination
immediately reveals that there are great differences in wall tension on different parts of the balloon. The variation is
described by Laplace's Law.
LaPlace's Law
The larger the vessel radius, the larger the wall tension required to withstand a given
internal fluid pressure.
For a given vessel radius and internal pressure, a spherical vessel will have half the
wall tension of a cylindrical vessel.
Why does the wall tension increase with radius?
Why does wall tension increase with radius?
The implication of this law for the large arteries, which have comparable
blood pressures, is that the larger arteries must have stronger walls since an
artery of twice the radius must be able to withstand twice the wall tension.
Arteries are reinforced by fibrous bands to strengthen them against the risks
of an aneurysm. The tiny capillaries rely on their small size.
Capillary Walls
The walls of the capillaries of the human circulatory system
are so thin as to appear transparent under a microscope,
yet they withstand a pressure up to about half of the full
blood pressure. LaPlace's law gives insight into how they
are able to withstand such pressures: their small size
implies that the wall tension for a given internal pressure is
much smaller than that of the larger arteries.
Given a peak blood pressure of about 120 mmHg at the
left ventricle, the pressure at the beginning of the capillary
system may be on the order of 50 mmHg. The large radii
of the large arteries imply that for pressures in that range
they must have strong walls to withstand the large
resulting wall tension. The larger arteries provide much
less resistance to flow than the smaller vessels according
to Poiseuille's law, and thus the drop in pressure across
them is only about half the total drop. The capillaries offer
large resistances to flow,but don’t required much strength